The Spiritual Passover
The Passover we
celebrate brings salvation to the whole human race beginning with the first
man, who together with all others is saved and given life.
In an imperfect
and transitory way, the types and images of the past prefigured the perfect and
eternal reality which has now been revealed. The presence of what is
represented makes the symbol obsolete: when the king appears in person no one
pays reverence to his statue.
How far the symbol
falls short of the reality is seen from the fact that the symbolic Passover
celebrated the brief life of the firstborn of the Jews, whereas the real
Passover celebrates the eternal life of all mankind. It is a small gain to
escape death for s short time, only to die soon afterward; it is a very
different thing to escape death altogether as we do through the sacrifice of
Christ, our Passover.
Correctly
understood, its very name shows why this is our greatest feast. It is called
the Passover because, when he was striking down the firstborn, the destroying
angel passed over the houses of the Hebrews, but it is even more true to say
that he passes over us, for he does so once for all when e are raised up by
Christ to eternal life.
If we think only
of the true Passover and ask why it is that the time of the Passover and the
salvation of the firstborn is taken to be the beginning of the year, the answer
must surely be that the sacrifice of the true Passover is for us the beginning
of eternal life. Because it revolves in cycles and never comes to an end, the
year is a symbol of eternity.
Christ, the
sacrifice that was offered for us, is the father of the world to come. He puts
an end to our former life, and through the regenerating waters of baptism in
which we imitate his death and resurrection, he gives us the beginning of a new
life. The knowledge that Christ is the Passover lamb who was sacrificed for us
should make us regard the moment of his immolation as the beginning of our own
lives. As far as we are concerned, Christ’s immolation on our behalf takes
place when we become aware of this grace and understand the life conferred on
us by this sacrifice. Having once understood it, we should enter upon this new
life with all eagerness and never return to the old one, which is now at an
end. As Scripture says: We have died
to sin – how then can we continue to live in it?
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From an Ancient Eastern Homily by Psuedo-ChrysostomPhoto taken from Wikimedia Commons
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